Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
College news, June 1, 1927
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1927-06-01
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 13, No. 27
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol13-no27
~~
~~~ Radcliffe—Elizabeth
_ than 40 male students at Hamline Uni-
% police as soon as she discovered the
we we a
9
*
, ec?
Ed ene,
~ Youth Tiuahe Over.
- Aquatic Old-Timers |
The Varsity-Alumpae
game on ‘Wednesday, May 31, showed
« water polo
that the strain of rgcent exams did not
hav® a too devastating effect on the Var-
sity. team; however, their_victory: Was
hard won-and the final score was close,
5-3, .
At the opening of the first half the
Alumnae claimed the ball with a rush
and scored the first goal ‘by a beautiful
long shot from Carey.
soon taken away from them by Tuttle,
who arrived late,¢but made up for this
by the extreme punctuality with’ which
she , reached. the center each time the
~ whistle blew. During the first half ‘Field,
playing a very reliable right forward,
succeeded ‘in making three clean goals
in spite of Fitzgerald’s valiant defense.
Dalziel, emulating the long passes and
throws of the Alumnae, made a gorge-
ous long distance. shot, and the first half
ended with Varsity ahead.
The first goal of the second half was
also made_by the Alumnae, and was fol-
lowed by a second, a throw from Rice,
more than half the length of the pool.
But just as the Alumnae were creeping
up, Field made another goal, and nothing
more was done ‘befdre time was called.
Most of the playing was scrappy in the
middle of the field, and every one was
heavily guarded; however, there was not
an unusual amount of fouling. Varsity.
worked together very well, but the best
individual player, M. Carey, was on the
‘ Alumnae team. The line-ups were as
follows:
Varsity—J. Seeley, 27; K. G@. Field,
‘a8; B. Pimey, 27; E, -Morris, 727; A.
Bruere, ’28; A. Dalziel, ’29; V. New-
bold; 27... Subs.: HH. ‘Tuttle, 28. for
Pitney; M: Brooks, ’27,, for Morris. -
Alumnae—D. Lee, '25; H. Rice, ’23;
J. Ward,.’23; M. Carey, 20; P, Harris,
26; M. Tatnall, ’26; R. Fitzgerald, ’26.
Subs. :
for Tatnall; Tatnall for Hitchcock.
Twelve Colleges Choose
Juniors for Social Work
New York will again be the campus
and sociological laboratory for twelve
college Juniors during the month of July
when they attend “Junior Month,”: run
by the New York Charity Organization
Society.
Miss Clare M. Tousley, who has
charge of “Junior Month,” announces
that the students are to live atthe
Women’s University
they did last year.
The twelve colleges have just selected
their representatives to “Junior Month”
this year; they are as follows:
Barnard—Helen Greenblat,
N. J,
Bryn Mawr—Margery Saunders,
tleton, N. H.
Connecticut—Ruth Shultis, Winchester,
Mass.
Elmira—Mary Rose, Elmira, Ni; YY:
Goucher—Madeleine Clay, Jenkintown,
Fa,
; Mt. Holyoke—Alice, Kimball, Benzonia,
Mich.
Club together as
Newark,
Lit-
Belcher, C€Cam-
bridge, Mass.
Smith—Florence Lyon, home town not
known at present.
Swarthmore—Emlyn M. Hodge, Royal
Oak, Mich.
Vassar—Molly Thacher, South Orange,
N. J.
Wellesley—Florence Hollis, Philadel-
phia, Pa. si
Wells—Sarah Brown, howe town fat
known at present.
Our last year’s
“Junior Month” was Jessie Hendrick.
This will be the eleventh summer of
“Junior Month.” All expenses of the
students are paid by a board member
ofe the Charity Organization Society.
During the month the girls hear national
leaders in the social work profession and
visit places of unusu’l interest. Visits,
lectures and field work are co-ordinated
through round table discussion. The
‘purpose of “Junior, Month” is to give the
undergraduate a panoramic view of mod-
* ern ‘social work which she may carry
back to her college the following year.
representative to
°
: Pajamas Startle Ladies
' $T. PAUL, Minn.—(I.’P.)—In spite
of faculty orders to the contrary, more
versity here staged their customary i
spring pajama parade last week. The
dean of women put in an alarm for the
but the of-
This lead was)
CONTINUED FROM PAGBP 1
end of a 22-16 score. The Jine- -"p was
as follow8:
Alumnae—E.. Musselman, ’26; C. Re-
mak, ’25; M..Buchanan, ’24;
25; M. Carey, ’20.
Varsity—E. Boyd,
C. Swan, ’29; J. Huddleston,
Freeman, ’29.
S. Walker, ’27, substituted for Boyd
in the second -half,
Varsity Captains ,
The Athletic Association announces the
following people as Varsity captains for
rfext year:
STIOGNOY- foe H. Tuttle, ’28
Basket-ball «.:.......B. Loines, ’28
TBOTORSE 6 ccc k M. Fowler, ’28
Swimming ..,+.. R. Bryant, ’29
Water Polo’ :..... EK. Boyd, ’29
Archery <...4; M. Gregson, ’28
Fencing .. “A. Paskhurst, 30
on a bs elected in the fall
M. Hitchcock, ’20, for Rice ;.Rice |'
« OILY SKINS—
ENLARGED PORES
How to Correct Them
By HELENA RUBINSTEIN
International Beauty Specialist
COMPLEXION
beauty depends
very largely upon
fineness of the
pores. This simple
treatment corrects
oiliness—makes pores invisibly
tiny and keeps complexion clear,
smooth and unblemished.
Each night cleanse with VALAZE
BEAUTY GRAINS, my skin enliven-
ing wash which frees pores of excess
oiliness, blackheads and ities
refines pores—leaves skin vet-
smooth. 1.00.
For ULTRA eensitive skins (instead of
peau: Grains) “use VALAZE PORE
‘SPECIAL. 1.00.
Follow, everyother night, with VALAZE
BEAUTIFYING SKINFOOD —ani-
mates—bleaches mildly, creates an ex-
quisite skin texture, 1.00.
On alternate nights, and every morni
apply VALAZE PASTEURIZED
FACE CREAM-—the only cleansing
cream that benefits oily, pimpled or
acne-blemished skins-—soothes and pro-
tects. 1.00.
For daytime cleansing and before ap-
plying powder VALAZE LIQUIDINE
—refreshes—refines—absorbs oiliness—
corrects shine on nose and chin—im-
parts flattering finish. 1.50.
The Finest Cosmetics
VALAZE POWDERS— ROUGES—
LIPSTICKS absolutely pure—protec-
tive to the most delicate skin—in @
wide range of extremely flattering tints,
1.00 to 5.50.
At the better stores or direct from
Nelena Rebinflein
46 West 57th Street, New York
PARIS
Reg. U.S.
(Send for SECRETS of
BEAUTY— Edition 27—a ’
40-page booklet filled with -
valuable information on
the scientific treatment. of
all beauty-marring con-
ditions.
LONDON
Pat. Off.
men in their gay “nighties,”
| ficers of the law refused to respond.—|
=the Stontord ees
Me id sate.
bee
STREET
-LINDER &
PROPERT
PTICIANS
20th and
Chestnut
Streets
Philadelphia
a
_— ea ee
H. ZAMSKY
Portraits of distinction
902 CHESTNUT STREET
Philadelphia, U. 8. A.
We take Portraits at the. Col-
lege as well as in our Studio.
When you are in need of a good
one call Walnut 3987. i
‘ALUMNAE PARADE™}
D. Le,
’2§ ; A. Bruerey ’28; |:
8) DB.
The Graduciteg Seniors
Are facing the question
of
“WHAT TO DO
NEXT uae
Senie of you are well fixed; you
have a family business to work
with. It will be to your interest
to think about the new develop-
ment, Group I nsurance, which will
be a factor of in impor-
tance in the rela of your
business to its ails
Some of you have a decided bent,
and are going to follow it. One
way of making sure that you will
finish the course of life you have
chosen is to take advantage of
Annuity, Endowment, and Straight
Life Insurance.
Some of you have worked for
your education and must earn as
much money as you can, as quickly
as poisible, The selling of Life
nsurance gives the most and
quickest return for hard work; it
also offers the greatest freedom for
original enterprise. It is not a
push-button job. The John Han-
cock is looking for men like you
and would like fo hear from you.
Write to us in regard to any of
these points. We shall answer
Me inquiries without any ob-
igation to you. Address the
INQUIRY BUREAU,
ZA ae ae
LiFe INSURANCE COMPANY
oF Bostom, MassacnusarTs
197 Clarendon St., Boston, Mass.
If your policy bears the name
John Hancock, it is safe and
secure in every way.
School of Library Science
— DREXEL INSTITUTE
Philadelphia, Pa.
A one-year course for college grad-
uates only. Trains librarians for all
types of libraries.
MODERN LITERATURE
First EDITIONS
THE CENTAUR BOOK SHOP
1224 Chancellor St.
PHILADELPHIA
JUST BELOW WALNUT AT 13TH
COSTUMES
TO RENT FOR PLAYS, Ete. -
REASONABLE PRICES
Van Horn & Son
Theatrical Costumers
12th & Chestnut Sts., Phila., Pa.
' ell pull
ail at << pail]
sult tities suiTtf li Ie _ ae
cD
a al ao]
Nt
1 TU vuittflfiie ae
Try this new number
on your Notebook
Parker Pens
($3.50 with lad Gols Bend) point and
14K GOLD POINT, extra-flex-
tble—a Pen witha GOLD
CLIP or rolled GOLD *END,
|’ at the price of pens with clips. |
‘SHE PARKER PEN. COMPaNyY —
Factory and General Offices
PHILADELPHIA SCHOOL OF
od iyaead ae
L’ORIGAN PARIS
JASMIN DE CORSE
STYX L’OR
One Dollar
6
DO YOU KNOW How
LOVELY YOu ARE?
LES POUDRES
Si 5 Be
‘QTY FACE POWDERS will
show you how soft-and
fresh and clear your com-
plexion can be. They are the
finest powders that can be
made—supreme. in quality,
with deep, clinging fragrance.
L'AMBRE ANTIQUE |
EMERAUDE CHYPRE
LA ROSE JACQUEMINOT.
MUGUET
|
» FOR SPORTS
ON AND OFF ~
THE CAMPUS
5 es
price.
supply lasts.
Lafawene Trading Company,
A NAVY MIDDY
Genuine U.
fully tailored,
Excellent for tennis, canoeing,
basketball, hiking, camping. The price
. of $1 is less than a third the regulation
Send in the coupon while the
LAFAYETTE TRADING COMPANY
394 Broadway, New York City
394 Broadway, New York City
S. Navy middies, beauti-
of finest close- woven
white drill, with dark blue flannel col-
for
Enclosed find $
Navy middies.
Name
Address : 8
My dress size is....................-.-
FORDHAM LAW SCHOOL!
WOOLWORTH BUILDING
NEW YORK
CO-EDUCATIONAL
Case System—Three-Year Course
Two Years of College Work ‘Required
for Admission
“Morning, Afterneen and Evening Classes
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
CHARLES P. DAVIS, Registrar
ROOM 2851
sneer
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY °
2200 Delancey Place
~~ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
If you are interested in becoming
an Occupational Therapist and in .
- the new course 1927-28, please.
communicate with Miss —
W.. —_— oe: 4
“| tion, Horticulture, and. a
_ Estate
THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL OF ~
DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE AND ._.
LANDSCAPE :ARCHITECTURE
A Professional School for college
graduates.
The Academic Year for 1927-28
opens Monday October 3, 1927.
THE CAMBRIDGE-LOWTHORPE
EurRoPpEAN TRAVEL COURSE
Sailing from Montreal June 10th.
Sailing from Naples Sept. 8th.
THE CAMBRIDGE-LOWTHORPE
oe
at Groton, sachusetts
From Wednesday July 6, to
Wednesday g 24.
4
1 Henry ATHERTON Frost — Director. :
13 Boylston St., Cambridge, Mass.
: At He d Square
thins ht
4
4 School of Landecupe Architecture for
inane =
seventeen acres,
Courses in- Landscape
ee ee
5